Set up a basic ASP.NET MVC project in OpenShift with Visual Studio Code for Linux, Mac, or Windows in this prequel to the five part tutorial series and learn more about how to use ASP.NET in OpenShift without the use of templates in Visual Studio.

Get started using OpenShift on Windows using the CLI (Command Line Interface) with the OpenShift Origin Client Tools (OC Tools). You can access powerful commands with this alternative to the web console for working with OpenShift locally or remotely.

PART 5 – Models: As we’ve been seeing in this series so far, MVC stands for Model-View-Controller. In the first two parts, I talked about the Controller. In the last two parts, we went over Views and putting your project on OpenShift. In this fifth and final part of the MVC series, I’m going to write about Models.

MVC stands for Model-View-Controller. We already went over controllers in the first two parts, and putting your project on OpenShift in part 3. Now, let’s finish things up by taking a look at models and views, and learning about Microsoft’s Razor framework.

In this part, we’re going to get your ASP.NET application (as created in Part 1 and Part 2) up and running on OpenShift. If you are new to OpenShift, here is an explanation of how it uses Containers and Kubernetes to build a platform for your to run your application.

In parts 1 & 2 of this tutorial, I’ll be going over getting started quickly by using templates in Visual Studio Community 2015. This means that it’ll be for Windows in this part. However, I’ll go more in-depth with doing everything without templates in Visual Studio Code in a following tutorial, which will be applicable to Linux or Mac as well as Windows. If you’re not using Windows, you can still follow along in parts 1 & 2 to get a general idea of how to create a REST endpoint in .NET Core.

Hey everyone, I’m Charlotte M. Ellett, and I joined the OpenShift team this year as a Developer Evangelist! I’m excited to do a lot of interesting stuff with OpenShift as a .NET user, and to show you how you can, too. I’ll write some about future blog posts that you can look forward to in the coming weeks, but first, a little introduction. I’m coming to this team as a game developer who sees a lot of potential in OpenShift containers for game makers and studios, big and small.